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Civil Rights history gets trivialized in Lee Daniels' The Butler

"The room should feel empty when you're in it," says Clarence Williams III, instructing his waiter-trainee on the etiquette of black servitude in Lee Daniels' The Butler. It's a funny line for this film since director Lee (Precious) Daniels always makes a big noise when he enters a room--this time releasing a film with his own name in the title same as Fellini's 8 ½ or Tyler Perry's Diary of Mad Black Woman no less.

How Daniels asserts/inserts himself into his films is crucial to the failings of?oh, let's just call it The Butler. While Daniels purports to make a biography of Cecil Gaines, a Black Southerner who went from picking cotton in Georgia to serving as butler in the White House for seven Presidential administrations, the film primarily displays Daniels' opportunism.

The Butler's major malfunction is its inexact parallel to Obama's own biography; Gaines's suffering through the post-slavery experience is completely different from Obama's story. Daniels feeds the marketable concept that Gaines's very particular sojourn represents the entirety of Black America's struggle for equality. He distorts Gaines's private life into a national epic, making him an emblem rather than a character.

Everyone in this parade of liberals, from Jane Fonda and Vanessa Redgrave to the various Presidential caricatures, look like waxworks. From the beginning, Forest Whittaker plays the title role as a thin, wizened symbol of oppression and endurance--a Morgan Freeman figure of quiet dignity and rectitude. His wife (Oprah Winfrey) and two sons (David Oyewelo and Isaac White) seem like appendages rather than family. Gaines's estrangement from his world suggests a reverse Benjamin Button aging through decades, keeping quiet during eras of social turmoil. He-and this film--most resembles Forrest Gump, that symbolic idiot savant witness to social progress he played no part in.

The Butler is unconvincingly noble--without even that streak of psychotic behavior in the ridiculous shit pie scenes of The Help. Gaines is always crotchety and proper, leaving dirty-minded resilience to Terrence Howard and Cuba Gooding, Jr in scene-stealing supporting roles--they're surrogates for Daniels the salacious auteur who's uninterested in what propriety and self-control mean.

Instead of a freaky-deaky view of the Civil Rights Movements' behind-the-scenes hook-ups (even Taylor Branch's Parting the Waves quotes Martin Luther King defending masturbation as a great release), we get an Obama-ized tale of Gaines as a dogged, enigmatic paragon. Rectitude as political caution was better dramatized in the far superior Jackie Robinson story, 42. But this film is so solemn and disingenuous it neglects its opening thesis: Daniels and screenwriter Danny Strong never confess what it feels like to make a room "feel empty" (although Whitaker's zombie performance gives an inkling). They trade the existential torment of self-abnegation (refuted by decades of Hollywood's servile-yet-impudent stereotypes) for the cliche of long-suffering martyrdom. (Daniels lacks the talent to show what being close to power feels like.)

A more credible film would consistently portray the advice of Gaines's father "Don't lose your temper with the Man. Dis his world; we just livin' in it." The Butler will feel inauthentic to most Americans who painfully, cagily work menial jobs; it is designed to appease condescending elites-which politicians call "the Middle Class"--who like to sentimentalize about workers who are beneath their regard (symbolized by the ever-changing line of Presidents, lightly satirizing the indifference of patronizing whites). The Butler may feature a largely Black cast under a Black director's baton, but it's really a movie for whites who seek self-congratulatory lessons rather than entertainment.

Daniels' key trope is the presumptuous montage: Lunch counter sit-ins at Woolworth's contrasting formal White House dinner parties--pseudo-political juxtapositions that would make Eisenstein wince. Daniels uses montage for sensationalism--not feeling or politics. The entire film exploits subtle and overt American racial violence. The first striking image poses a lynching next to the American flag. Such cheap, Spike Lee rhetoric trivializes history. The 1929 flashback to Gaines's mother being raped and father being killed isn't just horrible, it's an infuriating simplification: The son's modern attitude shows ignorance of Southern custom; pressuring his father ("Pop, what you gonna do?") is what gets his Dad killed. When titles say "Inspired by a true story" it merely means an anachronistic fantasy of Black American history adapted from Wil Haygood's Washington Post article ("A Butler Well Served By This Election") celebrating Obama's inauguration.

Daniels panders to the hip-hop attitude that Black youth know more about survival than their hard-working ancestors. The scene of Gaines driving through urban chaos following MLK's assassination is as phony as the riot scenes in Dreamgirls. Pandering to history and violence lacks the politic detail of Melvin and Mario Van Peebles' Panther; this more resembles Tarantino's unrealistic s and m circus Django Unchained. These discomforting prevarications are angled toward Osama's "Tonight is your answer" election speech-turning historical pain into shallow, maudlin victory. Daniels' tendency to falsify Black American experience and then exploit it is as offensive as Spielberg-Kushner's factitious Lincoln. A more personally honest, openly licentious fantasy would be more interesting. Now that he's played his Obama card, I'm sure Lee Daniels' Satyricon will come next.